Part 32 (1/2)

Edith and Alec had gone to Alaska. They could not report to me how Ruth was progressing. Elise had been unable to leave her cottage on the Cape for a single trip to Boston. Only Oliver's enthusiastic letters (Oliver who never sees anything but the obvious) a.s.sured me that, at least on the surface, Ruth had not regretted her undertaking.

Will and I returned the first of September. Ruth's two months would terminate on September tenth, and I had come back early in order to help close Oliver's apartment and prepare for the distribution of the children, which we had arranged in the early summer. Oliver was still in Colorado when I returned. He was expected within a week, however. I called Ruth up on the telephone as soon as I could, and told her I would be over to see her the next day, or the day after. I couldn't say just when, for Elise and Tom, who were returning to Wisconsin, were to spend the following night with me. Perhaps after dinner we would all get into the automobile and drop in upon her.

We all did. Oliver's apartment is on the other side of Boston from Will and me. We didn't reach there until after eight o'clock. The children, of course, were in bed. Ruth met us in the hall, half-way up the stairs.

She was paler than usual. As I saw her it flashed over me how blind we had been to allow this girl--temperamental, exotic, sensitive to surroundings--to plunge herself into the responsibilities that most women acquire gradually. Her first real vacation in years too!

Elise and I kissed her.

”You look a little tired, Ruth,” said Elise.

”A woman with children expects to look tired sometimes,” Ruth replied, with the sophistication of a mother of three. ”I had to be up a few nights with Becky.”

I slipped my arm about Ruth as we mounted the stairs. ”Has it been an awful summer?” I whispered.

She didn't answer me--simply drew away. I felt my inquiry displeased her. At the top of the landing she ran ahead and opened the door to the apartment, inviting us in. I was unprepared for the sight that awaited us.

”Why, Ruth!” I exclaimed, for I recognized all about me familiar bowl and candlestick from Irving Place, old carved chest, Russian samovar, embroidered strips of peasant's handicraft.

”How lovely!” said Elise, pus.h.i.+ng by me into Oliver's living-room.

It really was. I gazed speechless. It made me think of the inside of a peasant's cottage as sometimes prettily portrayed upon the stage. It was very simple, almost bare, and yet there was a charm. At the windows hung yellowish, unbleached cotton. On the sills were red geraniums in bloom.

A big clump of southern pine filled an old copper basin on a low tavern table. A queer sort of earthen lamp cast a soft light over all. In the dining-room I caught a glimpse of three st.u.r.dy little high chairs painted bright red, picked up in some antique shop, evidently. On the sideboard, a common table covered with a red cloth, I saw the glow of old pewter.

”You've done wonders to this place,” commented Tom, gazing about.

”Oliver gave me full permission before he went away,” Ruth explained.

”I've stored a whole load-full of his things. It _is_ rather nice, I think, myself.”

”Nice? I should say it was! But did it pay for so short a time?” I inquired.

”Oliver can keep the things as long as he wants them,” said Ruth.

”But it must make your room in Irving Place an empty spot to go back to,” I replied.

Ruth went over to the lamp and did something to the shade. ”Oh,” she said carelessly, ”haven't I told you? I'm not going back. I've resigned from Van de Vere's. Do all sit down.”

Ruth might just as well have set off a cannon-cracker. We were startled to say the least. We stood and stared at her.

”Do sit down,” she repeated.

”But, Ruth, why have you done this? Why have you resigned?” I gasped at last. She finished with the lamp-shade before she spoke.

”I insist upon your sitting down,” she said. ”There. That's better.”

Then she gave a queer, low laugh and said, ”I think it was the sight of the baby's little flannel s.h.i.+rt stretched over the wooden frame hanging in the bath-room that was the last straw that broke me before I wrote to Mrs. Scot-Williams.”

”But----”

”There was some one immediately available to take my place at Van de Vere's--another protegee of Mrs. Scot-Williams. I had to decide quickly.

Madge is improving every week, Oliver writes, but she has got to stay in Colorado at least during the winter, the doctor says. Becky is still far from strong. She was very ill this summer. She doesn't take to strangers. I think I'm needed here. It seemed necessary for me to stay.”